Exactly who the CIA will scapegoat for the impending wave of cyber-attacks and/or cyber-hijacks is not known, China, Iran, North Korea and/or Russia are the usual suspects. Needless to say, the alleged attacks will be construed as an act of war specifically designed to trigger World War III.

Back on September 16, 2016, it was reported that ten F-35 Joint Strike Fighters were grounded ‘due to the discovery of peeling and crumbling insulation in avionics cooling lines inside the fuel tanks’. Needless to say, the grounding provided the necessary logistics cover for the installation of computer-based software that allows for the remote hijack of the planes at a later date.

The impending cyber-attacks, which will likely be scapegoated onto China, Iran, North Korea and/or Russia, will be the first-ever cyber-hijack of military aircraft. Consequently, numerous jets will suddenly lose power and drop from the sky like flies, most likely onto suburban areas below.

F-35 CYBER-HACK & CYBER-HIJACK NARRATIVE
Prior to the alleged and unprecedented cyber-attack and/or subsequent cyber-hijack of military jets such as the F-35, the CIA must created the fraudulent narrative that this type of attack is even possible. Considering that F-35’s fly over Mach 1.6, operative tens-of-thousands of feet above cell towers and over territory with no internet availability, the entire notion of a cyber-attack on aircraft is laughable to say the very least. That being said, the CIA could claim that the fleet of F-35’s were hacked on the ground prior and were outfitted with a timed Trojan Horse-like malware but that would requite that the hack was undetected. In order to foreshadow that U.S. military jets will suddenly start falling from the skies like bombs, CNN published a propaganda report back on September 15, 2016, entitled “Fighter Pilot Passes Out, Jet Goes Into Free Fall“. The notion of an aerial-related cyber-hijack was first raised publicly by the Daily Mail back on March 16, 2014, when they published a report entitled “Is Missing Malaysian Jet the World’s First Cyber Hijack?”. The unprecedented report cited an anti-terror expert who said that a plane’s altitude, speed and direction could be hacked by ‘codes’ and that planes could be landed using remote control. Roughly 8-months later on November 4, 2014, the software for a state-sponsored cyber-hijack of planes was evidently touted by Russia Today in a report entitled “Could Hackers Cyber-Hijack a Plane? UK Scientists Develop Tech to Fight Malware”. The software was likely built with a backdoor which specifically enables commercial airliners to be cyber-hijacked, albeit from the CIA. In what appears to be pre-cyber-hijack attack propaganda and logistics, the Government Accountability Officer (GAO) reported on April 14, 2015, that newer aircraft are vulnerable to hacking. A day later on April 15, 2015, Russia Today published a report entitled “Hijack Hack: Modern Planes Vulnerable to Remote Midair Takeover” which was designed to further sell the notion that planes can now be hijacked by hackers.